Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Easy rule of thumb > If it's correct, it's not political and if it's political, it's not correct

Political correctness vs. The truth



Liberal infrastructure often seeks to justify its existence by enforcing political correctness.

Modern democracy has “perfected even despotism itself” in its capacity to compel conformity of the mind and heart.  

Our nation’s health and vitality may rest on the future rule or defeat of political correctness.

he academy’s liberal infrastructure often seeks to justify its existence by enforcing political correctness. When this infrastructure’s subunit at Boise State University recently pounced on political scientist Scott Yenor for his scholarly research, it employed all the honed tools of its trade: humiliation through denunciations, attempts to force repentance upon threat of mock execution, and culminating in the demand for silence and conformity.

What was Yenor’s sin? (Full disclosure: Yenor was my colleague at the Heritage Foundation during the 2015-2016 academic year). He published an academic essay arguing that second-wave feminist Simon de Beauvoir gave birth to the idea that biological sex is not connected to gender. As Beauvoir wrote:

One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman. No biological, psychological, or economic fate determines the figure that the human female presents in society; it is civilization as a whole that produces this creature . . .
Radicalized and refined by transgender advocates, the separation of sex from gender came to mean that gender can and should be freely chosen.

As Yenor points out, this rolling sexual revolution sparked by feminism doesn’t stop here. It is leading to a conflict in American society: in demanding that children be free to choose their gender, transgenderism activists, such as Ontario’s Minister of Children and Youth Services Michael Coteau, would label parents that prevent their children choosing their gender as child abusers.

In response to Yenor’s scholarly inquiries, the liberal infrastructure at Boise State University released an organized cacophony of anger and sophistry with a view to overwhelming the senses and mind. The university’s director for diversity and inclusion charged in an official statement that people like Yenor have a “pathetic fear of change,” and suggested that Yenor’s desire for heterosexual male supremacy “is the root of genocide.” Some members of the faculty senate agreed that Yenor’s scholarship is fascistic “hate speech,” the publication of which, in and of itself, violated the rights of women and transgender people.

The university is a microcosm of what may become of America. This form of moral and intellectual tyranny is peculiar to modern democracies, as French philosopher Alexis de Tocqueville observed long ago. While yesteryear’s tyrants employed force in their demand for outward conformity, modern democracy has “perfected even despotism itself” in its capacity to compel conformity of the mind and heart.  

Majority tyranny strikes less apparently but more insidiously, Tocqueville wrote:

In America the majority draws a formidable circle around thought. Inside those limits, the writer is free; but unhappiness awaits him if he dares to leave them. It is not that he has to fear an auto-da-fé, but he is the butt of mortifications of all kinds and of persecutions every day . . . for those who blame him express themselves openly, and those who think like him, without having his courage, keep silent and move away. He yields, he finally bends under the effort of each day and returns to silence as if he felt remorse for having spoken the truth.
The rolling revolution of conformity occurs with great ease and quickness in democracies. It imposes itself on brittle, democratic individuals according to a predictable psychology. Attempts to withstand the majority’s ire begin with self-doubt, leading to shame and self-silencing, and often culminates in the cessation of thoughts with which the majority disapproves. No indication would suggest that justice, good sense, or intellectual clarity can be relied upon to limit the majority’s future demands.

Will a future majority respect the freedom of thought more than it loves its brand of tolerance? Such a choice may never so dramatically come to public light as defenders of intellectual liberty (or of the family, or of religious liberty) may slowly disappear from the horizon through the majority’s power of demanding and enforcing conformity.

Our nation’s health and vitality may rest on the future rule or defeat of political correctness. Should its spirit supersede the spirit of free inquiry, universities will fully lose their meaning—even the natural sciences may succumb to it. Should the spirit of frank and open deliberation on policy issues and the common good be subsumed as well, self-government will be replaced by mass conformity ruled by acrimonious vengeance.

This piece originally appeared in American Greatness

Don't Be Intimidated By Problems, Be Inspired


I know it’s old news now but I was absolutely fascinated by the story of Juicero, the company that raised $120M in venture funding on the promise of being “the future of juice,” only to deliver an overly-complicated, overpriced smooshing machine.
It’s hard to imagine how CEO Doug Evans made his case to investors but I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall in those meetings to see how he justified needing a fortune to make a damn smoothie. I’m not trying to pick on him because building a business is tough stuff, and since his previous company was Organic Avenue, it’s clear he has a genuine passion for healthy living. That being said, there’s a simple but necessary business lesson here: Don't solve small problems.  Evans clearly has a passion for healthy, vegan living, which is a noble pursuit, but to create a winning business, you need to solve actual problems for people.
For example, I recently attended the Forbes Women’s Summit here in New York City and met the founders of two amazing companies that have addressed real pain points and are having a lot of success by not shying away from challenges.

Sisters Ashley Wade and Hayley Mullins are the co-founders of SleepBelt, a new type of baby carrier that facilitates skin-to-skin contact with babies safely and securely. The idea came to Mullins after she dropped her two-week-old baby. At first, I was shocked that she was so candid about the experience (as a therapist I know how much shame gets thrown around when it comes to other people’s parenting).
Mullins said she also expected judgment when she first started discussing her aha moment, but instead, she received gratitude from women who had experienced similar struggles as new mothers. She explains, “Infant falls are a very common problem that no one talks about, and no one solves it because no one talks about it!”
By being open about the issue that other carrying products weren't addressing, their origin story made them relatable and incredibly popular. After SleepBelt took off, they decided to design a full infant support system. So with a loan from investor collective SheEO, the women-designed products that have secured a series of national and international patents, hospital contracts and an endorsement from Leche League International. All because it solved a real, but unspoken, problem. Now three years after launch, the Canadian team has had huge growth year over year and is used in 107 hospitals. Not to mention that it was named a Trusted Leader by the Association of Women's Health Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses, and is an established name in parenting products.
Joy Tang also saw an opportunity for innovation when she founded Markable, an artificial intelligence company that makes it easy to buy any product in any video. I’m very interested in AI and Tang has emerged as an expert in the space. Prior to founding Markable, she won a gold medal in the Math Olympics, went on to become the only international student from China in her class at MIT, where she earned a full scholarship, and worked in high-frequency trading for seven years. Even with her impressive background, like many female founders, Tang reveals that she had problems raising funding because her fashion tech product lives in the “pink ghetto,” a term for businesses that serve women and are often dismissed by investors. But Tang persisted and was able to attract top talent because image recognition in video is an unsolved problem and this was an easy use case through which to develop the tool.
She now has four PhD-level computer vision engineers on her team, patented technology that can identifies 800 fashion brands and 10M products, and an algorithm that outperforms Pinterest, Microsoft and even Google. All born from a desire to find the perfect pair of shoes!
So no matter what your inspiration, remember that the best businesses address a pain point, and either make those hurdles easier to overcome, cheaper, or faster. So don’t be intimidated by problems, be inspired by them.

Why It's Okay To Distance Yourself From Friends

Friendships are important, but many people come in and out of our lives and it's okay to create distance from old friends if there isn't mutual effort.


I can count those who I consider to be my best friends on one hand, but if I were to think of all the people I consider friends who have left an impact on my life, I would need a whole lot more hands. With only 19 years of experience, I feel as though I have met so many people already. But when I think about the amount of people I will meet in the next few years... in college, after college, after meeting my husband, after having kids... I am going to need a new way to count friends.

I think people have so much influence on our lives that we don't realize. Meeting so many new faces the past couple months during my first semester in college has made me appreciate the bond that I have with my high school friend group and those that have come into my life - whether or not I still keep up with them.
Keeping in touch is one of the hardest things to do. With the chaos of my life and all the stuff going on, it's hard to take time to talk to all my friends. Thanks to social media, I at least know what they are up to. But that's not enough. With winter break coming up, I am looking forward to seeing old faces and making an effort to spend time with the people who have seen me through happy times, sad times, funny times, stressful times and will be there for me in the future.
First semester of college has been a whirlwind of "friends." I have slowly started to figure out which friends are going to remain in my life and which ones I will see at reunions and every couple years (again thanks social media for keeping me creepy and updated). There are days I miss the comfort of my best friends sitting at our lunch table and laughing about the latest embarrassing moment and over analyzing the latest break up. They were the best part of my last four years. All the memories I have made and big moments in my life have been surrounded by the same group of girls and guys. Not a day has gone by where I didn't think of them and the stupid stuff we've done.
But, as I'm becoming more "mature" as a college student, I have thought a lot about the people in my life. I decided freshman year isn't a time to be picky about who you talk to, and it's also a time where I can start letting go of the negative relationships in my life. That's why I've made random small talk with the people next to me in class, even if they aren't my usual crowd. Just a simple statement like, "could it be any hotter in here," or "wait what did she say? she talks so fast" has led to smiles and hellos outside of the classroom, which nothing feels better on a big campus than a familiar face while trudging to your college algebra class in the harsh cold and wind this time of year.
If you were to ask me if I am one of those lucky people who have had a friend since they were so young they can't remember, the answer is yes. But I would be lying if I said that her and I have been consistently friends for the past 19 years. We recently were reunited at school. This girl was who I grew up with, played dress up with, spent hours trick or treating, playing Barbies and just being little girls with. We realized that we can't think of any other friend who we have known forever and know so much about. Although we have different majors and our lives are somewhat opposite (Art Major and Education Major), we still get together a few times a month and catching up with her has made me a happier person by just simply knowing I have someone I can always come back to.
I don't want to necessarily drop the friends who I no longer talk to every day, but I am figuring out that it's okay to let our relationship slide for the time being. If there isn't mutual effort to keep in touch then it's not worth the stress. A friendship works both ways.
I guess the point of writing this was to recognize that people come and go into our lives and if you don't take the time to talk and give each other attention, you will lose them. It's 100% okay to take a break from people and create and strengthen other friendships, but it's nice to have people to come back to so don't let it end on a bad note. Even though life seems super busy at times, friends should be support and understanding and bright lights on dark days. So spend some time reflecting on who you give the most time to in your life and give yourself the freedom to keep them or distance yourself.

Free Online Computer Classes


Whether you are new to the computer or just want to brush up on your skills, you can find a free course online to meet your needs. Working through tutorials is a great way to practice computer skills you can use every day at home or work.

Entry-Level Free Online Computer Classes 

GCFLearnFree - This treasure trove of free classes is designed for all computer owners, whether you're a PC, Mac or Linux fan. Free classes cover basic skills, email, internet browsers, Mac basics, internet safety and Windows basics. For more advanced users, free classes in social media, using the cloud, image editing, search skills and mobile devices bring you up to date with the most recent hardware and software.
ALISON - ALISON ABC IT is a free online information technology IT course that teaches everyday computing as it relates to work and life. The course focuses on Microsoft Office applications and touch typing. Topics include: 
  • Computer software and hardware
  • Skills to manage files 
  • IT Safety
  • Use of email and word processing programs
The program takes 15 to 20 hours to complete. A score of 80 percent or more in each of the course assessments qualifies you for a self-certification from ALISON.
Home & Learn - All the free online tutorials at the Home & Learn site are aimed at complete beginners. You don't need experience to begin. Tutorials include multiple tutorials for Windows XP, Windows 7 and Windows 10. Several courses cover dealing with spyware. The beginner's guide to going wireless addresses the basics, routers, what to buy to go wireless and safety. Outlook Express is the subject of 10 tutorials.
Free-ed - Offers a collection of free e-books, courses, and tutorials on the topics of computer programming, operating systems, database operations, web scripting and design, networking, communications, game design, animation, and virtual reality.
Meganga - Provides free basic computer training for beginners and seniors. The video tutorials cover computer basics, the desktop, Windows, troubleshooting, Word, Outlook and other topics.
CT Distance Learning Consortium - The CTDLC offers a free four-module tutorial that covers computer skills, email skills, word processing skills and web skills. Each of the modules is self-paced and comes with review questions so you can evaluate your progress. The computer skills module includes instruction on using a mouse, click and double-click, opening and closing files, locating saved files and copying and pasting between files or text.
Education Online for Computers.com - Offers both free and paid training. The free training includes instruction on computer software including Word, Excel, Access, Outlook, Powerpoint, Photoshop, Flash and web development.

Free Online Computer Classes for Intermediate and Advanced Users

FutureLearn - Offers hundreds of free online courses from top universities and other organizations. These classes last up to several weeks each and are suitable for intermediate and advanced computer users. Topics include robotics, social media, digital accessibility, managing your identity, searching and researching and cyber security.

Skilledup - Offers a collection of free online computer science courses. Although some classes are self-paced, some require weeks or months of study, just as they did in their original college presentation. Among the topics covered are cryptography, compilers, program design, hardware security, fundamentals of programming, web development, web intelligence and big data.

Cast Media to Device in Edge browser on Windows 10


Windows 10 has brought with it a feature called Media Casting in Microsoft Edge, which enables the browser to cast video, picture, and audio content to any Miracast and DLNA enabled device on its network.
Microsoft Edge browser now supports video, audio and picture casting to any Miracast and DLNA enabled devices. Microsoft has provided a few scenarios to try out such as cast a video from YouTube, a Facebook photo album or music from Pandora.

Cast Media to Device in Edge browser


You can now cast Microsoft Edge content to a Wireless Display, and the procedure to do it is simple. Simply connect your wireless device to your PC, open Edge and search for multimedia content.
For casting a video from YouTube, go to YouTube.com in Microsoft Edge. Click on the “…” menu in the extreme right-hand corner and select “Cast media to device” and select the Miracast or DLNA device you want to cast to.
To cast a Facebook photo album simply login to Facebook in Microsoft Edge and click on the first photo in one of your photo albums to cast. Click on the “…” menu and select “Cast media to device” and select the Miracast or DLNA device you want to cast to. Later, simply navigate through your photo album by accessing the forward and backward buttons.
To cast your music from Pandora, login to Pandora in Microsoft Edge to get to your music and click on the “…” menu and the top left, and select “Cast media to device” and select the Miracast or DLNA device you want to cast to.

Remove Cast Media to Device from Context Menu

If you would like to disable or remove the entry ‘Cast Media to Device’ from your context menu, for some reason you could use Nirsoft’s ShellExView and disable the “Play To menu” entry.

I almost made the biggest mistake

 I have been asked and I have thought about adding live chat to this blog.


 I had even gone as far as to download the HTML and all the rest when it dawned on me, "I began this particular blog out of my disgust with the internet ghetto called, "Facebook".
FB is a site where I joined psychology groups, "supposed" intellectual groups, learning groups, etc. and they All turned out to be shit.

 Apologies folks, no chat.

Fat Is The New Normal

*Welcome to my nightly nightmare.


American women have gotten fatter as it has become more socially acceptable to carry a few extra pounds, according to a new study.
Florida State University Assistant Professor of Economics Frank Heiland and Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Economist Mary Burke are the co-authors of a paper published in the academic journal Economic Inquiry that argues that the ballooning weight of the population has fed even more collective weight gain as our perception of what is considered a normal body size has changed.
"This is a social force that we are trying to document because the rise in obesity has occurred so rapidly over the past 30 years," said Heiland, who also is affiliated with FSU's Center for Demography and Population Health. "Medically speaking, most agree that this trend is a dangerous one because of its connection to diabetes, cancer and other diseases. But psychologically, it may provide relief to know that you are not the only one packing on the pounds."
The paper, "Social Dynamics of Obesity," is the first to provide a mathematical model of the impact of economic, biological and social factors on aggregate body weight distribution. It also is one of the first studies to suggest that weight norms may change and are not set standards based on beauty or medical ideals.
Many economists believe that people eat more -- and thus gain weight -- when food prices drop, but that's just part of the story behind the nation's dramatic weight gain since the late 1970s, according to the researchers. The full price of a calorie has dropped by about 36 percent relative to the price of consumer goods since 1977, but prices leveled off in the mid-1990s. And yet American women continued to get bigger.
Heiland and Burke's "social multiplier" theory offers a potential reason why: As Americans continue to super-size their value meals, the average weight of the population increases and people slowly adjust their perceptions of appropriate body weight. Given that these changes in perception may come about gradually, Heiland and Burke suggest the nation's battle of the bulge may extend into the future.
Heiland and Burke studied body weights among American women in the 30- to 60-year-old age bracket from 1976 to 2000. Using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, they found that the weight of the average woman increased by 20 pounds, or 13.5 percent, during that period. There was disproportionate growth among the most obese women as the 99th percentile weight increased a hefty 18.2 percent, from 258 to 305 pounds.
The researchers also looked at self-reports of women's real weights and desired weights. In 1994, the average woman said she weighed 147 pounds but wanted to weigh 132 pounds. By 2002, the average woman weighed 153 pounds but wanted the scales to register 135 pounds, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
The fact that even the desired weight of women has increased suggests there is less social pressure to lose weight, Heiland said, citing a previous study that 87 percent of Americans, including 48 percent of obese Americans, believe that their body weight falls in the "socially acceptable" range.
While it seems thinness is increasingly idealized in popular culture -- images of waif-like models and stick-thin celebrities are everywhere -- there is a gap between the cultural imagery and the weights that most people consider acceptable for themselves and others, according to Heiland.
Biological forces also play a role in the rise of obesity. An additional pound of body weight is more likely to be fat, which does not metabolize calories nearly as well as muscle tissue, Heiland explained. Therefore, any increase in calorie consumption -- say, one more cookie each day -- leads to greater weight gain among an initially heavier person.

Story Source:
Materials provided by Florida State University. *If anyone should know, an FL. university should!

THE TOP 50 COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS RESOLVED

 *I've always asked myself, "Is a lie a lie when the speaker believes it to be the truth"? You wouldn't want to bring me to church now would you?


1. Coffee is made from beans
While it is widely believed that coffee comes from 'coffee beans', experts say it is actually made from a seed which is called a bean.
2. Chameleons change colour to match their surroundings
Believe it or not, chameleons actually change colour as a response to mood, temperature, communication and light instead of the object they are touching.
3. Mount Everest is the 'tallest' mountain in the world
While Mount Everest is officially deemed the tallest mountain in the world, experts claim that technically it may not be. The summit of Everest is officially higher above sea level than the summit of any other mountain, but Mauna Kea is the tallest when measured from base to summit. However, the record books deem it the tallest because it has the highest peak on Earth. 
4. The Great Wall of China can be seen from space
The Apollo astronauts confirmed that you can't see the Great Wall of China from the Moon. In fact, all you can see from the Moon is the white and blue marble of Earth.
5. One human year is equivalent to seven dog years
While true in some cases, it does not apply to everyone because it very much depends on the size and breed of the dog.
6. You lose your body heat fastest through your head
While this is widely believed to be true, some experts say it is a myth and claim humans would be just as cold if they went without a hat as if they went without trousers.
7. The Earth revolves around the Sun
Technically, the Earth, sun and all of the other the planets are orbiting around the centre of mass of the solar system, not specifically the sun. 
8. Different parts of your tongue detects different tastes
This was scientifically disproven by research which found that all taste sensations come from all regions of the tongue, although different parts are more sensitive to certain tastes which may be where the popular saying comes from.
9. Peanuts are a type of nut
Unbelievably, peanuts, along with beans and peas, actually belong to the single plant family, Leguminosae.
10. Giving children sugar makes them hyper
While some experts do stand by this common belief, other professors claim that the majority of scientific research has concluded that sugar does not cause hyperactivity in youngsters.
11. Humans have five senses
This is correct, although in actual fact there are at least nine senses and most researchers think there are more like 21. The five main senses - sight, sound, touch, smell and taste - are the ones referred to in this popular saying.
12. Fortune cookies are a Chinese tradition
Fortune cookies were originally the invention of Japanese-Americans before being widely adopted by Chinese culture.
13. Sushi means 'raw fish'
Sushi actually translates as sour-tasting.
14. Vikings wore horned helmets
While this may well be true, experts say there is actually no evidence to suggest that Vikings ever wore horned helmets.
15. The forbidden fruit mentioned in the Book of Genesis is an apple
The bible never mentions the forbidden fruit was an apple.
16. Vitamin C is an effective treatment for a cold
Flu-sufferers are often encouraged to increase their dosage of Vitamin C, but most experts have stated that there is little or no evidence that the vitamin can help treatment of a cold. Instead of effectively treating a cold, it is thought to help build up the immune system to ward of potential flu viruses.
17. Penguins mate for life
Penguins are mostly monogamous, but there are some species such as the Emperor Penguin which are serially monogamous. They mate with one couple for the whole season but will probably mate with another penguin the following year as the urgent need for breeding will make them avoid waiting for the same couple.
18. Caffeine dehydrates you
While caffeinated drinks may have a mild diuretic effect - meaning that they may cause the need to urinate - some experts believe they don't appear to increase the risk of dehydration.
19. When in London, you are merely six feet away from a rat
This could well be true but hasn't been proven and is just a rough estimate as rodents are not evenly spread apart.
20. There is a dark side of the moon
As the Moon is constantly rotating on its own axis, there is no area of the planetoid which is in permanent darkness.
21. A toilet's flush will change direction depending upon which hemisphere it is in
The real cause of 'backwards'-flushing toilets is just that the water jets point in the opposite direction.
22. Mars is red
The red colour we see in images of Mars is just the result of iron rusting.
23. Sunflowers track the sun across the sky
A common misconception is that sunflower heads track the sun across the sky when in full bloom. The uniform alignment of the flowers does result from heliotropism in an earlier development stage, the bud stage, before the appearance of flower heads so technically they follow the sun before they have bloomed, not after.
24. People use just 10 per cent of their brain
Neurologists describe the myth as false and state we use virtually every part of the brain, and that (most of) the brain is active almost all the time.
25. Your fingernails continue to grow after you die
The dehydration of the body after death can cause retraction of the skin around hair and nails, giving the illusion that they have grown. However, all tissues require energy to sustain their functions, and no such thing is possible once the mechanism that promotes normal growth shuts down at death.
26. Bats are blind
Despite the tiny eyes and nocturnal lifestyle, none of the roughly 1,100 bat species are blind.
27. Dropping a penny from the Empire State building would kill someone
A penny only weighs about a gram and it tumbles as it falls. Because of the tumbling and the light weight, there's so much air resistance that the penny never really gathers that much speed before it hits its terminal velocity. A gram of weight travelling at a relatively slow speed might hurt a little if it hit you on the head, but it's not going to kill you.
28. Handling a baby bird will make its mother reject it
Most birds have a very poor sense of smell, so in most cases are unable to even notice human scent on baby bird.
29. You need to wait 24 hours before reporting a missing person to the police
There is no rule that states you have to wait 24 hours before reporting a missing person. The person will be recorded as missing and their details made available to other UK police forces within 48 hours. 
Care for the rest? Ok

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